Search America's historic newspaper pages from 1836-1922 or use the U.S. Newspaper Directory to find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present. Chronicling America is sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities external link and the Library of Congress. Learn more

Download & Play

Questions

Newspaper Page Text

a*
SATURDAY MORNING?, NOVEMBKB 10,1866.
FROM EUROPE.
HOLLAND.
ALARMING REPORT- IROil TRK HAGUE-TROUBLE
nnswiN? IN TUE MBI-IBBT.-NIW, &c., _c.
[From the Loudon Times, October 24.]
Becont intelligence from the Hague uoints to nu
increase of agitation in llollaml. For tho past
few wooka soiiit-wliat disquieting IICWB baa roach
ctl us from that otherwise thriving mid happy roin
niunity: but wc could hardly lielicvo tho commo
tion to be of so Borl?os n elia* actor a8 to b,do any
momentous coiiBcqueneos. But when mattera
como to thrcrtta of a coup d'etat, and modifications
of tho doctoral law, it become? full timo for na to
inquire into tho cut?aos of tho disturbance. Tho
stir among political partios in that country arises
from n variety of circumstances. In the ii at placo
thoro ?B a disputo between bia Majesty of Pruasia
and King William III. of tho Netherlands. Tho
European poasoaaiona of tho latter moko up a no
pulation of 8.099,7.4, of which 427,650, or about
ono-oigbth, inhabit those parts of tho territorios
of Luxembourg and Liniburg by virtue of which,
till very lately, tho King of Holland enjoyed tho
privileges of ft member or tho German Bund, was
entitled to a voto in ita deliberations, and was
bound, whonovcr required, to furnish a contingent
of 1913 foot and 106-uorso to tho Federal army.
When, on tho 14th of Juno last, tho question of,tho
mobilization of that army was put to tho vote in
the Diet at Frankfort and all its mombors wore ex
pected to pronounce either for or against Prussia,
the King of tho Netherlands decmod himself en
titled to declaro liimaclf noutral, and upon the
dissolution of the Bund, following closo upon tho
battle of Sadowa, to withdraw himsolf and his
Grand Duchy of Luxombourg from tho Gorman
connection. Ho assumed that tho Germany to
which ho belonged, tho Confederation of which ho
was a inember, had coaacd to oxist; but the King
of Prussia, or for him Count Bismark, contended
that G orman v as a nation survived tho Bund, and
that for anything concerning tbo northern mem
bers of that body, and consequently Luxombourg.
Prussia had put herself at tbo hoad of a now North
Gorman Confederacy, upon which devolved all tho
rights of tho old Bund. Ho we ver desirable it might
bo that that mixed empire, which proved BO fatal
in tbo case of Don-mark, should coane BO far as con
cerns Holland, Bismark shows himself inexorable,
and refuses to ovocuato tho Btrong placo of Lux
embourg, which, as a f?deral fortress, is still oc
cupied by a mixed garrison, Dutch and Prussian.
Tho question would only be of moment for the
peace of Europo if Franco should avail hcrsolf of
tho pretext afforded by a disputo arising from the
EoBBession of a first-class fortress lying almost on
er bordors; but tho Emporor Napoleon has en
gaged "in no event to pick a quarrel" with Bis
mark, and Holland, left to her own resources,
would have no better chance with Prussia than
Denmark, or Hauovor or Savony, under the eamo
circumstances havo had.
The King of tho Netherlands must feel all the
moro loth to proceed to cxtremitios in bis foreign
disputes, as ho is now at issue with his subjects on
somo most important points of homo and colonial
policy. Parties in Holland aro divided on tho sub
ject of Java. Java, as the reader is aware, is tho
brightest gem in the Netherlands' diadom, tho
pride of the Indian Archipelago, unmatched for
beauty and fortuity by any equal extent of the
earth's surface. Java, and old Portuguese, and
subsequently a Dutch colony, carno into tho hands
of the English in 1811, and only fell back to tho
Net borlands by au act of spontaneous cession five
years later. The Javanese, a Malay raco, wcro al
ready civilized at the timo of the first Portuguese
settlement in 1611, and by the advanced stato of
their agricultural industry, aided by tho most
perfect system of irrigation, they bad made of their
land the granary of tho Archipelago. Tho Dutch,
who. previous to 1811, had only some settlements
La the island, bad introduced forced labor into
their plantations; but their ''peculiar iustitu
tionu" were abolished during the English oc
cupation, and not restored for several years
after the roin?talmont of Netherland rule.
One of the Governor-Generals of the Dutch
East Indies, however, by name Yan den Bosh, ef
fected a revolution on a large scalo in the island, ap
propriated all such soil as could beat be turned
to the production of sugar, coffee, indigo,
&c, ona by the means of compulsory labor
changed tho whole aspect ijnd economy of the land.
Tho resulta of these measures, it is stated, were a
lise in the revenue to a sum of ?4,000,000 yearly,
and an incroaso of tbo population from 5,000,000 in
1816 to 73,649,680 in 180*1. Wo must not, however,
suffer those somewhat startling numbers to mis
lead us. Tbo population of Java, with all its won
drous increase, is only about half the intensity of
that of Lower Bengal, and OB to trade, while tho
Joint imports and exporta, not only of Java, but of
all thp Dutch Islands in those Eastern Seas, aro
valued at about ?13,000,000, they ore exceeded by
?2.000,000 by those of the three little British dis
tricts in the Straits of Malacca, the two principal of
which wero still uninhabited 80 years ago. That,
with all the wealth which they accumulate for their
taskmasters. the Javanese laborers do not greatly
improve their own position one might feel tomptod
to infer from tho fact that the price of corn baa
during the last sixty years risen 260 per cent. The
island, which was once, ae we have said, tho sole
granary of tbo Malay Archipelago, has ceased to
export corn, and the supply for those islands comes
at the proBont day from the British possessions in
Peru. Arn can and Siam.
Bat, however, splendid iffiTy be for Holland tho
results of the forced labor system in an economi
cal point of view, the time las come in which such
questions aro put to the tent of humanitarian, no
less than utilitarian inquiry, and an outcry has
boon raiBod among a party in tho Dutch opposi
tion by whom tho system of cultivation in their
East ladies, bowover disguised it may be under
the specious name of "apprenticeship," is sti ma
tized as unmitigated servitude. It is little to tho
purpose to assert that the Javanese are not de
moralized by their preaont condition, or that they
' axe aware of no oppression, that the system s
indigenous, and has always been in tbo island. Our
age is a little troubled to distinguish between corvee
and battue, and downright alavory. It will put up
with no forced labor, even for the negro; so mach
less, then, for tho gontle and patient Malay, who
seeks no escape from his lot except in emigration,
and goes forth as a sailor, sometimes even as a
.pirate, or looks abroad for employment in any
other capacity but upon conditions of freedom.
Of such a nature is the question wbioh seoms to
have rouBcd the Dutch politicians from their wont
ed sluggishness. After the abolition of negro
slavery In tho Dutch West Indies in 1862-3 the
?Lib?rala wished to proceed to a similar meas
ure in boholf of their Eastern possessions. A
bill for tito aboLt.on of the system of forced
labor in those colonios was brought in lost
year in the "Dutch Parliament, but was rejoct-,
ed, as fraught with utter ruin to the colonies
themselves, no loss than to the mother country.
More latolv tho Government filled the measure of
popular discontent hy the appointmont to tho
omeo of Governor-General of the East India pos
sessions, tho highost office in the Crown's gift, of
a man formerly well-known for his loaning to
tho principles of froo trade and free labor, but who
had abandoned his principios and ratted from his
party, A vote of censure was passed in both
Houses against tho Ministers who bad advised the
nomination of tho obnoxious Governor. Tho King
retorted by the dissolution of tho Chamber, and
Holland is now in all tho throes of a general elec
tion. A royal proclamation, intended to soothe
tho angry spirits, seems to havo boon void of oifoct.
The Liberals aro likely to muster stronger than
over in tho now Parliament, and, in the ovent of a
now voto of want of confidence the Ministers are
said to contemplate n, resort to exceptional moa
surcs, equivalent to a violation of the charter of
1848. It is oosior to wish than to hope that mi 1dm
councils may prevail. The question of slavery,
even ander the moat mitigated form, ia ono with
which the prosont ago will bear no tampering. The
misohiof which a violent abolition wrought in our
West Indies and in tho Southern States of tho
Amorican Union might bo ovon more griovoasly
felt in the Netherlands colonies. For the sake of
tho 80rfs no IOHH than of tho masters, it would bo
desirable that the reform, howover total might bo
gradual; but hitherto no consideration of prudonco
has ever had power to stern tbo tido of passion in
this delicate und dangerous matter; and wo aro
not quite miro that even tho proverbial Dutch
phlogm will be ubi o to koop ita newly-awakened en
thusiasm within rational limita. ' ?
ITALY.
_ THE TIlOUIlI_*3 IN PALgB-CQ--AT.-B-TTWO STATE OF
A-c-JBfl.
'Palermo {Oclsbcr 10) Correspondence London Time*.)
Th? reports from Bioiiy are not of an encoura
ging eli arno tor. and that which gives thom the
color of troth is tho faut that a commission has
beon sent to Florence to urge the Government to
agopt moro onorgotlo measure?,. Set Palormo ia
in a stato of siege, and in occupied by 80,000 mon.
Notwithstanding the presence of each ft ?Torco, esr
oral R8?ftSBinatione in tho streets wero committed
loat week, suggested bv private vongeanco, and
tho communications with the neighboring towna
aro interrupted by tbo banda, which oro on tho in
oreaBO. Two mails, on routo to Miailmoro wero
attitckod anti robbed a fow daya ainco, and every
where throughout tho province there exists a gen
oral eonao of inaecurity. A porson writes from
Talormo :
AH you go along tho roid to Misilmcri you seo
tlio laborera al wont quiotly enough, especially if a
patrol ?B ['?im in;,', but nftor it is'passed, should a ;
diligonco or n carriage lioavo in eight, they aro nil j
up and armed, rondy for an attaint, behind a cac- .
tus or a tree. This littlo fact completed, and {heir ?
anus and plunder concealed, th o patrol on its re- :
turn Andu thom a^im hard at work with the sappa
Or zapponc, aa ignorant as babea of what lias !
passed.
The bauds, it is said, aro increasing, and a con- ,
aidorablo number of tho insurgents aro hidden in
tho woodB of l-'icuzza, which is twenty miles in cir
cuit. Of courso thoy will bo hunted out; but when
tiiu naturi) of Hie country is cotisidorcd, iu many
parts deserted, without roads, or BO narrow and
diflicult as to bo scarcely of any value, intersected
by largo woods or inaccossiblo rocka, ii is easy to
per?oive that tho work of restoring order must bo
long and diflicult. Sanguinary engagements aro
spoken of, but littlo is known about them. Wo
may, however, feel assured that mon with their
backs to a wall will fight doapcratoly. In tho city
of Palermo somo ohur hos, as well aB convents,
havo boon cccupiod. lu Momealo tho National
Guard han boon disbanded and the monastery of
tho Benedictines occupied by tho troops; wnilo
in tho districts of Carint, Baldi and Monroalo, 100
persons, suspoetcd of having taken part in tho in
surrection, have boen arrested. Gonorai Cadonia
has sont in to his Government a second ropo t
confirming all that has been said about tho
atrocious acts committed by the insurgents,
and deeply compromising tho religious bodies,
monks as well as "Holy Virgins," as thoy aro
conventionally styled. It must not bo forgot
ten, howovor' that many wore compelled to tako
fiart against thoir will under monaco of their
ives, and I havo hoard of thoso who weio com
pelled to put their names to papers with a pistol at
thoir heads. In a recent letter 1 informed you that
Prince Scalotta had boon arrested at Sorrento. It
was perfectly true, but,1*! tor an examination of his
fiapera, which led to no results, ho has been left at
iberty under tho surveillance of tho police. Much
of what has happened iu Sicily may bo regarded as
the consequence of the wretched inherit a neo left
by tho Bombona, under whom neither instruction
nor roads were provided for tho peoplo-under
whom law had no authority, the magistrates no in
dependence, and arbitrary power and favoritism
governed all things. Whether all this has been
changed under the new and constitutional Govern
ment may bo moro than doubted-too often it has
talked instead of acted, decreed almost impossi
bilities without showing the energy nocoBsary to
carry them out, and in tho matter of roads cer
tainly, while laying down magnificent plann for net
works of railways, baa neglected to form thoso
common roods without which railways aro uBoless,
and which would have given on impulso to th? com
merce and civilization of tho island. By this timo
tho world mast bo convinced by the state of Sicily
or Southern Italy, that our new rulers would have
dono well had they given more attention to tho
consolidation and internal organization of the va
rious portions of united Italy.
HIS FI.EBI8C1TOM IN VENETIA.
FLOBENCE, October 22.-Intelligence received
hero from Venetia to yesterday's dato announces
that the plebisoitnm bos taken placo amid the
greatest possible enthusiasm. The conconrso of
the inhabitants waa re>ry large. At Vonice out of
80,000 electors 20,110 took port in tho sullrago,
almost all of whom voted affirmatively. In tho
City of Padua 8000 votes wore recorded. In tho
country districts tho peasants proceeded to the
ballot-boxes with the cures at thoir hoad. In tho
district of Dolo 7170 persons voted out of a total of
7700 electors. At udino the workmen's society
opened the.proceeding!, by the ceremony of the
benediction of the national flag. All the inhabi
tants of the city and many priests flocked to the
balloting urns, which wore placed in the publio
squares. At Bovigo the plebiscitum was inaugu
rated by tho bishops, in all the rural districts
there was a very large concourse of tho population
at tiio voting placea. \
FLORENCE, October 23.-Official accounts have
been received of the resolta of the jtfebiscitum in
Venetia up to last night. At Verona lG,07? electors
voted, one vote only being in tho negative; at
Udino, out of 5473 votes recorded, there was only
one dissentient; at Chioggia and Bovigo 7902 and
2760 votes were recorded respectively, all ayes; at
Vicenza 8810 votes were givon, two only being
negative; at Ban Pietro Incarriauo the votes, 6135
in number, were all ayes.
NAPLES, October 21.-The fete in celebration of
tho anniversary of the plebiscitum in Naples, took
place to-day, amid great popular demonstra
tions. The Workingmen's Association shouted
' 'Venetia forever 1 the unity of Italy forever 1"
S ' RUSSIA.
THE CONSPIBATOBS AGAINST THE LIFE OF THE CZAB
PUNISHMENT OF THZ HAND.
[Petertburg {October l8) Correspondence of the London
Morning Herald.
According to tho report of the trial of the ac
complices of Karakozon, and of other members of
the secret society called the Organization, it ap
pears that so early as 18t?3 many of these young
men wero in the babit of meeting, and that they
had formed tho projoot-of propagating the doc
trines of socialism among the people. With this
view they established a mutual aid society, and
began to found schools and various associations
for the employment of mental and manual labor.
Translators of both sexes were employed, as well
as bookbinders, seamstresses, &c. They endeavored
to establish a manufactory for cotton wool, and
whoreovor they had the opportunity they tried to
disseminate thoir ideas among tho operative
class- By degrees their viows took a wider range,
and they began to entertain revolutionary ideas,
and to devise plans for their execution. But two
things wore nccossory. They wanted a ohief, and
thoy wanted funds.
For a loader Tohernitchehsky was considered the
moat proper porson, and, as it was necessary to
b ?gin ty of?bcting his liberation, for he was in ox
it J, Straudol, one of the leading members of the
society, offered to go to Siberia for this purposo.
As to the method by which funds were to be pro
oared, not much difficulty was approhondod on
that score, as the members of the organization re
solved not to be deterred from the execution of
their project by any scruples whatever, and they
adopted as their motto that the end justifies the
means. Various plans were proposed, snob as
plundering tradesmen by clerks attached to the
secret sooioty, robbing the mail, &o., and one mem
ber, Victor Vedosaiofl, even agreed to murder his
father, and to make over his inheritance to the so
oioty. In the meantime on innor association was
formed, called the Hell, to which vory few
members belonged, and it was here that
tho question of regioido was started by
Ischoutino at the end of last yoar. Somo
of the membors rejected the idoa altogether:
some proposed that ita oxecution should
be postponed. Karakozoft alone, I?chontino'a
cousin, entirely approved of it. and immediately
resolved to carry it into oxecution. Karakozoffs
intention was only known to Ischoutino, Ermoloff,
Straudel and Yourassoff, who appeared to have
used all thoir efforts to diatmado lum from accom
plishing bia designs. In their whole conduct tbero
seems to have been no understanding amongst the
members of .either society, for whilst some were
engaged in drawing up incendiary rulos and pur
chasing type for establishing eeoret premios, cor
responding with tho Polish exiles in Siberia, and
forging pasaporte for those who had escaped from
oonflnomont, procuring funds by tho most dis
honest means, and purchasing revolvers, others
wore strongly opposed to the use of physical force,
and some poor and ignorant mon had actually
joined the association under the impression that ft
was merely a mutual aid society, and they bad not
tho slightest idoa of what was meant by socialism,
-mudism and communism. It carno ont on the
trial that many members of the organization were
entirely ignorant of tho oxistenoo of tho Hell, and
some of those who knew of it threatened to de
nounce it to tho authoritios.
It is impossible to imagine anything moro con
temptible than this association, which oausod so
much alarm at the timo of its discovery. The
?fosvoiskia, ValdomoBti oxprosaos its surprise that
a handful of young mon, many of whom were not
of ago, should havo startod tho idoa of effecting a
vast political and social revolution in Russia at a
peaod of porfeot tranquility, not only in tho ab
sence of all political agitation, but in the midst of
demonstrations of attachment and loyalty to the
Emperor, of which history furnishes no example
Thone foolish youths, corrupted by a bad systom of
education, and by vicious examplo, shrank with
terror from tho oxocution of their plans. Thompm
bora of the association to 'which they had givon
Huoh a torriblo name, endeavored to restrain the
band of thoir infatuated companion; Straudel and
I Ermoloff oven followod Karakozoff to St. Peters
burg; Ischontine wrote him a letter urginu. him to
I rotam to Moscow, ant}, indood, aucooodod in por
I euading him to do so. But it appears that Kara
kozoff again loft Moscow unknown to his compan
, lons, and he cither committed tho crime for which
!? Z'Vi'rf VtvsurX+.-t; +_ .?H i .?'..> ?.".*
\
ho has suffered unaided, or ho found aonio moro
desu?ralo associates in tbo modoru capital. In
deed, according to his confession, ho did And abet
tors in St. Potorsburg, but thero was not suu'cient
evidence to support his statement.
All day on Monday groups might bo seen nt
tho corner of every street reading the notice
that the sontenco which had boen passed upon
the prisoners would bo carried into oxcciuion
on tho following morning, and nt an early hour on
TucBilay tho pcoplo bogan to nsscmblo round
the scaffold on tho plain of Smolensk, n dreary
waste, to which the iiieloniency ol'l ho weather gave
?i still moro dismal appearance. It had been raining .
all night, and towards the hour fixed 1er the exe
cution it began lo unow. Owing partly lo Ihia eir- |
oumatanoo, and portly perhaps to lue fact that
losa interest wau fell in tho fato of I-clioiitine than
In that of KarakosoflT, tho coneoune wau fur lena I
numerous than that, assembled to witne-i the oxc- j
culion or the regicide.
At li?o minuto- past seven a detachment of gen- !
darnies, willi drawn swords, wau .seen approaching
tue BCauoJd, followed by eleven carts, in each ol'
which sat oi.o of tho culprit8. willi hin back to the
driver, having a board fastened to bia breast, on
wuicli tho words "Stato criminal ' wero printed in
large letters. Ischoutiuo was the first to mount
tho HM-bld, and when thoy wero nil assembled
tlioy wero ?laced in a row, the drums were beaton,
and .hoy ntl atood uncovered whilo tho Bcnteuco
waa read. Iacboutiuo was then lod to tao drop,
and those prisoners who oolouged to tho
uobility wero degraded in tho manner usual on
such r.ccaaions. Thoy woro made to kneel
while a sword was broken over the hoad
of each, In the mcantimo ono of tho priest?,
(of whom thero wero tlireo in attendance, two
Greek nnd ono Roman Catholio), waa administer
ing tho colBolatiouB of roligion to tho chief cul
prit, and whon ho had concluded his. exhortation?
iBchoutino bowed tinco times to tho crowd, took a
last look at his accomplices, and resigned himself
into tho bands of the oxeontionor. His eyes woro
bandaged, tho shroud was put on, and tho ropo
was fastened round bis neck, when a messenger
was seen approaching at a rapid rato, holding in
his banda a paper which ho waived above his head.
Every man ni tho crowd took oil' his hat and
listened in breathless silence- whilst the paper was
being read, which proved to bo, as was expected, a
commutation of Ischoutino's sentence, no is to
bo sent to hard labor for fife in tho mines of
Siberia.
A fow hours afterwards all the prisoners woro on
tho road to Moscow, wbonco they will be taken to
their several destinations.
THE E?VSTERN QUESTION.
INTOBTAUT DEVELOPS-EHTS - THE NEW SCHEME OF
NAPOLEON.
[Condantinople [October 13J Correspondence London Horn
ing Herald.]
"Will you beliovo it? The Cretan insurrection is
momentarily put in tho aliado by rumors which,
should they provo founded, would chango at no
distant timo tho faco of European Turkey, destroy
forever the influence of Bussia in tho East, afford
amplo compensations both to tho Popo and the
Emperor ol'Mexico, and definitely solve tho Orion
tal quostion to the great glory of Franco and of
tho Emperor Napoleon, whoso prestige, sorely dam
aged by tbo collapse of tho Mexican Empire and
tho turu which tho German question has token,
would bo retrieved ton-fold? After having ex
pressed my personal boliof that those ru
mors aro but one of theso ballons d'essai par
ticular to the secret policy or the TuUoriea,
I give them to you for what thoy aro worth.
Amongst our Europoan diplomatie world it
is whispered that the Marquis do MouBtier has
stealthily but steadily worked during the five
years ne boa spent at Constantinople-ho was ac
credited thero in August, 1861-to merge the Chris
tian population of tno Sultan belonging to the
Greek Church into the Latin one. It is said that
tho Russian Government had scent of those
intrigues, and that it aimed at averting them
when Princo Orion' mado, last year, overtures to
high dignitaries of your own Church to unite the
Greok Church with tho Anglican one. It is said
that tho Pope is not adverse to the French scheme,
which would moro than amply comp?nsate tho sa
crifices to which Ina temporal power has been sub
jected, and that once the schism that divides ttxe
Christians in the East should have been extermin
ated at the expenso of the Grecian rite. Jerusa
lem, with ita splendid associations, would offer to
tho spiritual heads of Christendom a throne much
more brilliant and suitable than Rome. - It is said
that tho converting of the Egyptian Government
into military and administrative zones, copied
from those now existing in France, is preparatory
to the realization of the great scheme, which after
all ia but ? part of the aspirations of Napoleon III.
to imito the whole Latin race under the guidance ot
Franco, and, according to the imperial ideas, tho
Greek populatlbns of Turkey belong to the Latin
race. As to Russia, she muet bo content to rule
over the Bclavonio ono, if abo con. Lastly, it is
said that even those heads of the Iman, whoso in
tellect is not completely darkened by fanaticism,
feel that since the Cnrietian populations of the
Sultan aro no more subjected to his effectual rule,
owing to the protection they have tho right of ask
ing, in virtue of the treaty of 1856, from Franco,
England and Prussia; and seeing that they (Mus
sulmans) have more to fear from Russia than from
England and France, it is impossible for the Mus
sulmans and the Christians to continuo to live in
the samo country and under the samo government;
and thenco endless speculations which tho tuturo
of Egypt, and Grecco, and other Christian princi
palities, bear the burden, and which I shall not
trouble you with. But one thing is certain, be
fore leaving us to go and assume tho direction of
foreign aflairs in Franco, M. de Moustier express
ed himself in a very cheerful way upon the insur
rection of the Cretans and the propaganda of
Greece, both of which he considered as not being
viables. And rightly or wrongly the parisiana of
the blending of the Greek Church ii.to the Latin
ono conclude from tho language of his excellency
that ho has bcon put at tbo beim of these affairs
in Franco by Napoleon, expressly to carry through
tho sohemo, tho foundation of which he has so
cleverly laid down.
WEBB & SAGE
HAVUVG ADDED TO THKIl. ALREADY
PITIA
A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OP
FRENCH CHINA
BY DIRECT IMPORTATION,
ARE PREPARES TO SUPPLY THEIR FRIENDS
AND THE PUBLIC AB IN
FORMER TEARS. AT
NO. 5 HAYNE-ST.
November. 4 lmo
A Treacherous and Deadly Foe!
CATARRH!
PAIN AND NOI?lCH IN TIIK IUDAD.
Dr. Norton's New Remedy
FOR CATARRH,
AND MODE OP TREATMENT l8 THE ACME
OP PERFECTION.
r? BREAKS UP THIS TERRIBLE DISEASE AT IT8
Fountain Head, and removes at onco nil tho wrct>ched
eymptoma of this loathsome malady, such as Pain lu the
Temple?, Offenalvo Discharge-, Obotrnctton of tho Breath
ing Tube?, Repulsivo Breath, Snapping Sounds In the
Ears, AbsentrMindodncsa, Mo-tal Depression, Dlmnoes of
Vision, Boro Throat, Hacking Cough; roetoro. tho sonso
of Ttt?te and Smell, and permanently eurea tho discuto in
all Ita type?, forms and stage?, with absoluto certainty.
This remedy and mode of treatment, like tho disease,
is peculiar. In conaiata of the inhalation of harmless 11
quldB from the palm of the hand. The immediate relief
li affords ia alone worth ten tune? tho coat of the ruine
d?a*
Norton'a New Pamphlet on Oaten*- ia out Informa
tion nevor boforo published- Call at our nearest Agenoy,
or send a stamp for it
Piopared by GERRIT NORTON, No. II Ann-street,
New York.
U?rs. B?OUX. & LTNAH,
C-T? ATO__-_OAI__Sa,
November 1 ihstrtfmo Agont for Charle-ton.
.i
?
i n* T_v--. .
DRUGSTORE.
E. H. KELLERS & CO.,
(SUCCESSORS TO A. O. PUIN,)
APOTHECARIES AND DRUGGISTS,
No. 131 MEETING-ST.,
TUIH? noon IVOKTH OK NilllKKT
WOULD INFORM TIIE l'UULIO THAT Til HY UAVl,
.m hand a fu'U aiBorttncnt of DUO(l!l, MEOIOINKl
I'ltOl'lUKTARY ARTICLES. HOAPd, BBDSEIE8. PEU.
KIJMEHY cuil FANO? GOOD?, and oro prepared t i
?"apply pliysicluuH and pr?valo ?auol?ien at cheapest inar
kal rates.
E. U. K1XLER8. M. D.H. BAER. M. D
July 19
THE
lOUTHERH EXPRESS COMPAHT
Offloo No. 147 Meeting-street.
003ST3STDSOTI02SrS
WITH AIX
RAILROADS THROUGHOUT.
UNITED STATES.
Every attention given to the
<afe Transmission of Freight.
Honey, and Valuables.
^ILL CALL FOit AND DELIVEB
FREIGHT TO ANY POINT IN
THE Olly FREE OF
CHARGE.
H. II. I'LA NT,
President. Auauert?, Ga.
tnrllH
\A . PRACTICAli ^Cr
BOOIBI-IKEEDPEIR,,
ACCOUNTANT AND COPYIST.
Collections promptly attended to
OF/IOE COR. BROAD AND OIIUU?B STREETS,
OHARLEBTUIf, 8. C.
BOORS WRITTEN UP, ERRORS DETECTED. BILLS
MADE OUT, and all k1 ds of WRITING.
axmtt,
Tnntrnctton given In PKAOCIOAL BOOK-KEEPING
and UufliDoi-B generally, st moderate prices.
September 28_
i OYLAN & TUERS,
4A tJFAOTUKKRa OF, ANL WHOLESALE DEAL.
nBS In, WHITS LEAD. ZING PAIN?B, OOI.OBfc
kaalo___, &cu
No. 93 MAIDEN LANE,
New Sor ,
Ordert by mall promptly attended to
*?!*.?. ?l ?m. '.
BREWSTER ft SPRATT,
Attorneys at i^uw nail Solicitors In fWuitj,
OmOI Na S? BliOAD-OTRKET,
(JAMBRON, BARKLEY & GI).
HAVE CONSTANTLY ON HAND
A LARGE bTOCK
RAILROAD, STRAMROAT & SAW HlLL
STEAM ENGINES AND SAW MILLS
BAB AND SHEET ISON
3AST AND SPRING STEEL
liOW MOOR AND CAST STEEL O OOMOTIVB
TYRES
OILS AND AXLE OREASE
GUM AND LEATHER BBLTIKG
RAILROAD, SHIP AND OUT SPIKES, &o.
EVANS A WATSON'S FIRE AND BURGL&B
. PROOF SAFES, &c., ha,
HERON, B1RKLBY & 60..
NO. 150 MEETING STREBT.
Angustia
C. Ko HTJGER,
No. 187 MEETING-ST^
OHARLRSTOK. S. O.
LOCOMOTIVES, RAILROAD IRON
RAILWAY SUPPLIES
PORTABLE A STATIONARY ENGINES
IRON A WOOD WORK, MACHINERY
SAW MILLS, GRIST MILLS
COTTON (UNS
MILL AND GIN BANDS
GILDER'S SALAMANDER SAFES, Ao
.LAITORM, GOUNTER AND WARE
HOUSE SCALES.
,OTTON PICKERS, &?., Ao
mm- Represented by Kewi M. K. JES3DP A 00.,
Kaw York.
AprlU_. _
OAVEGA, YOUNG & McKENZIi
LAW AND COLLECTION 0FF??E,
Nos. 39 and 40 Park Row*
I8AA0 DATBQA. )
[TAVINO ?UGOKBDHD TO THF TOEUDON OOLLM
CX TION B08IMKB8 of Means BIRKBY, PR?
CISB A FIANDKBH, we will ottecd to ?io oollectlon c
o?? t doo end m a turks? outee throughout the Unit*'
atttaz ? i?.**d?.
ooMMissioirMua TOM ALL Turn UTA m A
lanwtrj g ? .
Tt
.. ARCHIBALD (??:TTV & CO.,
FACTORS,
SM?Ding and Commission Merchants.
NORTH ATLANTIC WHARP,
CHARLESTON, S. C.
A. dolly.K. A. Homler.S. T. EoiKlcr.
July 7 ?
WILLIS & CHISOLM,
'ACTORS, COMMISSION MERCHANTS
AND
SHIPPING AGENTS,
IFTDiL A'lTENU TO TBS PDI'.OHAHE, HALE /HI
5 Y SHIPMENT (lo Forton and Dumentlc Porto r
lOTTON, MOE, I.UMUEU eud UAVAL HTOLK;>.
ATliASTlO WUAKK, Cliftrlcslou, 3. V.
*. VILLIS.A. R.CKIur.L?
Ooti)li?r16
RISLEY & CREIGHTON
Sliippg and Commission Merchants,
AMD
IMPORTERS OP W. INDIA PRODUCE.
COR. EAST BAY AND ACCOMMODATION WHARE.
October 1
WILLIAM H. G?L?7lLAND & SON
Real Estate Agents, Auctioneers
ABB
COMMISSTOtf MERCHANTS,
OFFICE NO. 33 HAYNE STREET.
September 8
J. REEVE GIBBES,
F-A. O T O IR,
ANO
COMMISSION MERCHANT
No. 2, Corner Broad and Church sts.,
AND
No, 7 Vanderhorst's WhaVf.
AO" Orders and consignments or COTTON, RICE,
NAVAL STORES, PROVISIONS, PRODUCE, kc, BO
icited 3mo Eoptember 25
KENDALL & DOCKERY,
PACTORS
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
ACCOMMODATION WHARF,
CHARLESTON, S. O.
O. P. BENDALL.Oboraw, S. O.
O. II. DOCKER?.Richmond Oouuty, N. O.
49" Liberal advanced made on Consignments.
October 11_ino
SAMUEL R. MARSHALL,
(FOBXXBLT COPAHT?TEB OF J. E. AllOXB A CO.),
IMPORTER AND DEALER IN
ENGLISH AND AMERfOAN HARDWARE, CUT
LERY, GUNS, AND AGRICULTURAL
. IMPLEMENTS,
NO. 810 KING ST., THIRD DOOR BELOW SOCIETY,
CHARLESTON, 8. 0.
October 1____*
EVANS & GODBOLD,
FACTORS
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
No. 11Q East Bay,
OVSB THOMSON BBOTHKOS.
CHARLESTON, S. 0.
N. G. EVANS.T. W. GODBOLD.
8eptember8 _
BOWERS & S?LC0X,
?RS, AUCTIONEERS AhD ORNERA
MISSION AGENTS,
No. 137 Meeting Street, opposite tbe Market.
BROKERS, AUCTIONEERS AtiD GENERAL COM
MISSION AGENTS,
YH HAND CONSTANTLY: FARMS, PLANTATIONS,
f BOU8E8 AND LOT* for salo and to rout AT?
spared to receive all kinds of GJ0D8, WARES AND
EROSANDI8E, PRODCOE, Ac. on oontlgnoient.
Ino. PU h NIT URE, HOR8P8. AND VEHICLES of
rery deseripllon for sala Will also giro onr Bpecia)
attontlon to uDT-DOOR BALER 3mos September 6
JAMES MCCORMICK,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
WUOL&UAI^ AHD BETAU, PHM.gTl IN
CLOTHS, CASNIMKRES AM) VEST?NG9.
GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS,
No. 85 Broad, sti'eet,
July 33 ?moa CHARLESTON, 8. 0.
?. S. HULL, Agent,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
8. W. CORNER CHARLESTON HOTEL,
WHERE A' ,.. ASSORTMENT OF OLOTH8, CAS
HI . 8 AND VEBTINGS can-be bad, togetbei
trlib a o.iaic? a acortmentaf
Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods.
LINEN AND MUSLIN SHIBT8"made order, In an)
fie tbat may be desired.
MR. JOHN T. FLYMN
arm give bia spatial atte? to tbe
TAILORING DEPARTMENT
_,_ usual. ljr Jane
LA PIERRE HOUSE,
PHILADELPHIA.
Tbe Bnbacrlbora baVlng leased tbls levorlto bonae, 1?
baa been '
BEFITTED AND REFURNISHED
IN AN ELEGANT MANNER,
and te now prepared with the most perfect
appointments for the reception of guests.
Tbe first poaltlon among flrat?ia?s Hotoli will b?
Malntvxied In tbe future, aa In tbe past.
September 3 8moa IMKKtt k FARLEY
WILLIAM BR00KBANK8,
.TBABX ?AS FITTICH AND PLUMBER
OLA1N ANU ORNAMENTAL UAH FIXXIllCt.i. GA?
t BlTiiaU AND PLUAliilMi PttuilPTLlf Ar
?KNOPD PO. >0. IKJ KlS-.!tSH* K t
A.. ILLINO,
WBOUt?AXM AND BXTAXL DZiXAB Of
MILLINER? AND FANCY ??00D8,
DRY GOODS TOYS &o.
At Ho.?O? ItIf?G-STIIKICT, Charleston, U.l
AX NSW SOBE -H?QSB.
?T-rorirrlila _a_tx copy for two nomt?ts. *m& aam
-luiotbiiiouoc, _tt a-waned u
! .. -'...-.. . . "?A . . \
T. G. A. R.
DR. LAWRENCES
CELEBRATED
ANTI-SYPHILITIC,
roll TUE CUBE OP -?TIIILI. IN ALL IT
FORMS.
rpnifl E.VTIUOIIDINAIIY AND TIUJLY VALUEABLB
JL Medicine I? prepared ?vitli tin- utmost ?1.111 aud c*ro
by -reKiil-r grad?alo ot Mn?icliio aud 1'hf.ruiiuy. from
Iro-h HOOTII-KN MKDIOINAI? BuOTS AND HERBS,
aud Is thorolore
ENTIRELY VEGETABLE.
??y It completely neutralizes the peculiar SyphlUtic
poldon, and eradicates every particle ot the taint from
tbo ovKtuni fiiruvf-r.
?is? Tills Is not a roiuedv that UAY Ot7B", but one
tliat Di KM i,nd WIi?L CUKE evory case without failure,
wli? n t&koti licoordlug ti? ?Mri-ctions.
ITS' Neitlur la It a rom ed y to bo tried, but one that
t?a? ?ccii trlod and thoroughly tented In some of the
very worst cases of secondary and tortury 8y phill?',
aud lu every cane It ni ad o a complete ou*o, and gave the
RUthircr a new lease of life, health, streugtii, and happi
urB?.
??- It Is now being need and recomm?*nded In their
private practice by some of the most eminent physi
cians in the United HUtes.
A FEW RECOMMENDATIONS FROM PHYSICIAN?
Dru. Duggan, Darnos, and Ein?;, of Wilson, N. O.,
certify "tbat LAWRENCE'S ANTI-SYPHILITIC le an
efficient and valuable rooiedy, and that it has perform
ed remarkable cures."
Dr. Blake, of Baltimore, Md., says: "Tour remedy la
performing truly marvellous cues m this city."
Dr Hi-lib, ot Now York, writos: "I havo fairly test
ed your ANTI-SYPHILITIC m as bad casos as I could
find In tho city, and ia every instance It mad a a oom
pirti, and rapid cure. It really seems to possess almost
magical powers."
S&- Wo could procuro numbera of certiorates from
paUont?, but of course delicacy would forbid tuena from
signing their full us-acs; but cortlflc-tea are of small im
portance any how, as a fair trial will convince the mont
sceptical of the real merits of tho Modlcine.
READER, STOP ! PAUSE ! THINK !
Have you ever boen affected with Ryphllla in any ot
ita forms 7 If so, do not run the fearful risk of tmtall
Ing horrid diseases upon your children and children's
children to the third and fourth generaUoua bnt be
positively suro to drive every ves'tge of the d sesee
from your a?stem at once, by taking !__W_.l_Na_/8
ANTI-SYPHILIT10.
?tjy It has neen remarked by a celebrated medical
writer, "that if SyphiUa aud its sflsets ooaid be mopped
half of the diseases that now affllot the human family
would disappear "
4sr- This valuable medicine 1* pleasant to the taste,
has a delightful odor, and la not in the least Injurious.
49- For sale by all i.ruggiat-, and
KING & CASSIDET,
KO. 101 MEET INO BTBEBT,
Charleston, a 0.
?-TBEWARE OF IMITATIONS.**?
September 10
BT KAIIX- the ?Egyptian LOTUS/' Tennyson's
"Ohorslltas" become nothing but worthless loafers:
he had givcm them I-BD-R'a glorious Perfumo tram the
game beautiful flower, they would have become xnosrvi.
and -U-OAKT gentlemen, and their wives, ^?"
E
As F-NUZHT W-ixao-'s _?uaio to the ear; as the
polished Parian marble to the touch; as the morning
star to the sight, so Is PSHD-T'S exquisite Perfumo et
Eomus LOTUS to the smell.
IN"
AIT. ____, BEAUT v ia allied to religion, even although?
it Only approaches the truth. It was this ln_tin_t
that made the Hindoos wear the Eon-TUM LOTUS ia
their mythological processions: but PKHITBT, In his n?
uoioDB ?v-_uro_-t from that flower, has surpassed the
ancient*.
_ST
NATUE.-, UJUIOUBTUDLY, ia the substratum of all; but
man, by refining on it, makes himself her absoluto su
perior, as witness, Rossini, in his manipulaUnn of ocean,
forest and bird muslo, and PTHHET, m his Sonnait
LOToe PE-TUMB.
THZBB IS A aaxAT DEAX or aunt about which to
best, the useful or the beautlfu-, That only is na best
that uinTxa MTB, as PRUNKT has done in his EGCT-XL__
LOTUS PSBTUMK.
E
M_-_un__c, the wonderful French Orator, when
dying, asked for the odor of flowers, li he was living,
O, how eloquent would he be over Pxsnxr'a Harman
LOTUS I
"BIUKQ nowxn-, ?nutsn raowzBSl" cried tho de
lightful Mrs. Homans. A distinguished American
Poetess has nearly finished a song on the parfeotion Ot
the Floral Kmanow, PENH-.'? Ea_FIT_B LOTUS.
As HEHBT CLAYin eloquence; as Blondell In painting;
as Har tin oculptur*; aa Bonner in nowspaperdom ; as
Spear is mlnlug; as Perham ia North Paelflo railroad
lug, so America's beautiful and refined women say,
PE-Ui-T iS in hlS EOVTTIAN LOTUS.
KING & CASSIDET?
GENERAL AGENTRS,
No. 151 Meeting street.
September 10_
M. M. QUINN^
Wlioleaale & Retail Dealer?
ni ?
BOOj-S, PERIODICALS,
NEWSPAPERS, STATIONERY, _STOn
0. BUT BIRO.lTBBIf,
(Oppolto Ipn sti-H,
>Kc_f_._=iii__]o*i'o_sx_ mm o.
X-e Uteet tssues of the iressalwsvs oa hand.
-UbsraipUJu? to^Aliod and Uood* datarera?a* <?.
jraraed by Alan or Biore/sa, ^^ ueuvsraa? io?.
AU osan OtmiiaUi mua M ottmpt?t MtonMa to.
MSKm ii .? _ -. ._